Carpenter, on 17 February 2012 - 05:19 AM, said:
Really, no. A horn is another object. You don't turn one object into another object in legends. You have an object be a metaphor, or a metaphor becomes interpreted as an object, but one object doesn't substitute for another. A horn is not a weapon, that also goes for one that hypnotizes dragons. Like The Wanderer says, you don't call a smith a weapon just because he is useful in making weapons.
The quoted post you had was completely unrelated. That referred to the dragonhorn being Joramun's horn, which has little evidence as I said, but is also not the main discussion of this topic. I don't see how you cannot call it a weapon. It apparently controls the most destructive beings in the world. I'm sure Euron would argue it is his greatest weapon. Also, charisma and manipulation are not weapons in the literal sense, but we see Littlefinger and Varys use them as such.
Carpenter, on 17 February 2012 - 05:19 AM, said:
Azor Ahai. It is used in a story from Essos. Where people have names with z in them. You don't have to theorize about the completely unknown names of the Children of the Forest, when you have an answer right in front of you. When you hear hoofsteps, assume horse, not zebra.
Used in the stories in Essos, but still supposedly a man in Westeros. My point is, the name suggests that he was not some normal Westerosi, that he was not a First Man at all. This just supports my thought that the legend is a metaphor. I am not saying he was a CotF or whatever, I am just saying the name draws speculation as to whether Azor Ahai is a First Man or not.
Edited by The Shadow Fox, 17 February 2012 - 12:30 PM.